Georgia Post Apocalyptic Monument



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  2. Georgia Post Apocalyptic Monument Pictures
  3. Post Apocalyptic Monument In Georgia
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YouTube Round-up: The Best Post-Apocalyptic Videos of Oct 1-7 Skynet-Like AI Poses Apocalyptic Threat in New Fox TV Series, NEXT Podcast Episode 2: Raised by Wolves Review, Battlestar Galactica Reborn, Weekly YouTube Round-Up. Conspiracy Theories: Post Apocalyptic Monument The Georgia Guidestones eBook: Leonard, Cheryl: Amazon.ca: Kindle Store. Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Georgia Guidestones, America’s Stonehenge The Georgia Guidestones contain instructions for humans in a post-apocalyptic world, but nobody knows who put them there. Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Georgia Guidestones, America’s Stonehenge. The Georgia Guidestones monument was unveiled on March 22, 1980, before an audience of about 400 people.The structure is made of six slabs of granite with ten guidelines inscribed on them in eight different languages. It is believed that it contains post-apocalyptic messages.

The Georgia Guidestones contain instructions for humans in a post-apocalyptic world, but nobody knows who put them there.

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Unlocking The Mysteries Of The Georgia Guidestones, America’s Stonehenge

Sometimes called the 'American Stonehenge,' the Georgia Guidestones are just as mysterious as their name suggests. These massive slabs arranged into a monument in rural Georgia have confounded writers and tourists for decades. And what we do know about the origins of the Georgia Guidestones hardly makes the picture any clearer...

The man called himself Robert Christian. This wasn't his real name and only two people ever met him face-to-face: first the granite finisher, then the banker.

When Christian walked into the offices of Elberton Granite Finishing in Elbert County, Ga. in June 1979, he explained to company president Joe Fendley that he represented an anonymous group who had been secretly planning a stone monument for 20 years and that he'd come to Elbert because their quarries had the best granite on Earth.

Fendley soon found that Christian's plan befit such grand preparations. He wanted five upright outer stone slabs that would end up weighing a little more than 42,000 pounds each — about two-and-a-half times the weight of an elephant. These stones would encircle a center pillar that would end up weighing almost 21,000 pounds, which would itself be topped with a capstone weighing almost 25,000 pounds.

Christian needed such stones, he explained, because he was building a monument that could withstand the end of the world. Human civilization was about to destroy itself, Christian believed, and his monument would provide instructions for whatever was left of humanity after the apocalypse.

“I was thinking, ‘I got a nut in here now. How am I going [to] get him out?'” Fendley later said of that first meeting. Get Christian out is precisely what Fendley did, by passing him along to local banker Wyatt Martin on the off-chance that Christian might actually be able to produce the enormous funds necessary for such an enormous project.

When Martin insisted that Christian provide his real name in order to keep the transaction above-board, Christian insisted that he only reveal it to Martin, who had to sign a non-disclosure agreement and destroy all the paperwork afterward. Furthermore, Christian gathered the money from a number of banks all across the country so that his origins couldn't be traced.

Martin and Fendley were skeptical, but sure enough, a $10,000 deposit arrived and they soon set to work. Fendley found the stones and helped Christian secure a location for his monument. Once things were underway, Christian stopped by Fendley's office to say goodbye, adding, 'You'll never see me again.'

From then on, Christian only resurfaced to write letters to Martin in order to ask that ownership of the land be transferred to the county. The letters came from cities all over the country, never from the same place twice.

But with Christian in the wind, construction nevertheless carried on, and by March 1980, the Georgia Guidestones — coming in at more than 19 feet tall and almost 240,000 pounds — were ready to be unveiled.

Georgia Post Apocalyptic Monument Pictures

Now the public would see that the monument was as strange as the man who commissioned it. Just as Christian specified, the Georgia Guidestones featured — in eight languages (English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew, Arabic, Chinese, and Russian) — instructions for humans in a post-apocalyptic world:

    1. Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
    2. Guide reproduction wisely — improving fitness and diversity.
    3. Unite humanity with a living new language.
    4. Rule passion — faith — tradition — and all things with tempered reason.
    5. Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
    6. Let all nations rule internally resolving external disputes in a world court.
    7. Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
    8. Balance personal rights with social duties.
    9. Prize truth — beauty — love — seeking harmony with the infinite.
    10. Be not a cancer on the earth — Leave room for nature — Leave room for nature.

Beyond these instructions, called the 'Ten Commandments of the Antichrist' by opponents, the Georgia Guidestones feature astronomical specifications so particular (a hole through which the North Star would always be visible, a slot aligned with the rising sun at solstices and equinoxes) that Fendley had to bring in a specialist from the University of Georgia. In addition to the post-apocalypse instructions, you see, Christian made sure that the Georgia Guidestones could serve as a kind of calendar as well.

But although Christian made his intentions clear, that hasn't stopped conspiracy theorists, vandals, and the like from speculating that the Georgia Guidestones might actually be a landing site for alien visitors, or an edict of the 'New World Order' set on controlling the populace through genocide, or a giant monument to Satan, and so on.

Amid all the speculation, Christian never re-emerged to correct anyone, although he did stay in touch with Martin over the years, even meeting him for dinner several times. But still, Christian never revealed anything more about the Georgia Guidestones and Martin never revealed anything more about Christian.

As Christian always said, according to Martin, 'If you want to keep people interested, you can let them know only so much.”

After this look at the Georgia Guidestones, discover the mysteries of crop circles. Then, check out five bizarre structures and findings uncovered by Google Earth.

Post apocalyptic words

They're called the Georgia Guidestones and they actually look like the Ten Commandments. The five 16-feet-tall granite walls overlook a barren knoll in northeastern Georgia, supporting a 25,000-pound capstone. But what's even more astonishing than their massiveness (four of the five slabs weigh more than 20 tons each!) is what is inscribed on the rock: carved on the polished granite are directions in eight different languages instructing the survivors of a supposed apocalypse on how to properly rebuild society.

The directives (written in Russian, English, Spanish, Babylonian cuneiform, classical Greek, Egyptian hieroglyphics, Sanskrit, Swahili, Hindi, Hebrew and Arabic) range in theme and scope, urging humans to 'avoid petty laws and useless officials,' 'balance personal rights with social duties,' 'guide reproduction wisely—improving fitness and diversity,' 'leave room for nature,' 'protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts' and 'unite humanity with a living new language,' among others.

Given they were they are built and their positioning, the Georgia Guidestones also serve as a compass, a calendar and a clock.

The monument's origin story is a long and convoluted one and, although no one knows who really commissioned the project and to what intent, the general consensus is that in June of 1979, a man going by the pseudonym Robert C. Christian approached the Elberton Granite Finishing Company representing a 'small group of loyal Americans' that were intent on installing a rather complex stone monument. Over four decades later, the details of the commission and the history of the art piece have yet to be fully discovered.

Post Apocalyptic Monument In Georgia

Although a famous tourist attraction and a common subject of study among historians and artists alike, the monument obviously resonates in 2020 especially, a year filled with rather apocalyptic events (and it's only June). That being said, we find the inscribed instructions to be pretty sensible ones, reminding us of the power of peace, unity and logic when trying to be the best versions of ourselves. That message should echo at any point in time, in every country of the world.

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